4. Context16234-1 “e-CF” which provides the common framework for all the proposals in line with...
Transcript of 4. Context16234-1 “e-CF” which provides the common framework for all the proposals in line with...
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 1 of 23
4. Context
Introductive note
A CEN/TC 428 Ad hoc Group has been established to transfer the proposals developed by the CEN ICT Skills
Workshop to foster ICT Professionalism in Europe into CEN/TC 428 activities and prepare the documentation
required for EC funding application.
The proposal presented here dealing with a foundational body of knowledge for the ICT profession is one of them.
It is not in competition with the other proposals but it is their complement seeking maximum consistency with them;
therefore all proposals should be read and considered in conjunction with each other, and in conjunction with EN
16234-1 “e-CF” which provides the common framework for all the proposals in line with the TC 428 “ICT
Professionalism and digital competences” scope.
The five proposals are:
Foundational Body of Knowledge (BoK) (present project)
e-Competence performance indicators and common metrics
CEN/TR 16234-2,-3,-4 “e-CF User support” (revision of existing TR’s and new development)
ICT, e-leadership and innovation Curriculum guidelines
Code of Conduct and Ethics
This project proposal deals with matters which fall into the scope of CEN TC 428 - ICT Professionalism and
Digital Competences - and is strictly integrated with the activities ongoing in this organisation. The
integration stems not only from the fact that its main deliverable is a key contribution to the CEN/TC 428
main mission of maturing the ICT profession overall (covering the knowledge pillar as further outlined in
section 5.1.), but also, and above all, from the strict liaison that the deliverables of the project have with the
existing and future Work Items. This work targeting ICT professionals is complementary to the activities related to
the digital competence framework for citizens (DigComp 2.1).
This proposal is a direct response to the Domain “e-Skills and e-Learning” of the ICT Standardization Rolling
Plan 2018. It has been developed in full coherence with multi-stakeholder initiatives and public policies
(such as the EU e-Skills strategy, the Skills Agenda for Europe, the Digital Agenda and the Digital Skills
and Jobs Coalition) aiming at reducing skills shortages, gaps and mismatches and at fostering ICT
professionalism in Europe overall.
In the ICT Standardization Rolling Plan 2018 the following main action is requested:
“Action 2 SDO to further develop the EN 16234-1 European e-competence framework (e-CF) and progress
towards a comprehensive framework for ICT professionals: maintain the e-CF and continue work on job profiles,
Body of Knowledge, qualifications and certifications, and methods and tools for the development, promotion,
implementation and maintenance of the e-CF to promote and strengthen ICT professionalism in Europe (including
international).”
The forthcoming EN “Foundational body of knowledge” and TR “BoK methodology and User guide” planned by this
proposal are considered as a major component in support of above Action 2. The proposed work directly contributes
to the goals stated in the Annual Union Work Programme (AUWP). The support is both with respect to the area that
is the subject of the proposal and with respect to the goals it aims to achieve.
Area of the proposal
The AUWP is consistent with the EU Rolling Plan for ICT standardization which lists e-Skills and e-Learning among
the policy priorities where standardization plays a role in the implementation of the respective policy. Above all, the
AUWP states: "timely ICT standardization actions are expected to reduce market fragmentation by increasing
interoperability of […] services and therefore contributing to the competitiveness of European firms of all sizes,
including SMEs". The topics were identified by the EC and reviewed with the MSP.
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Goal of the proposal
The ICT Standardization Rolling plan for 2018 specifies in consistence with the AUWP the political and technical
context for this proposal and its main goal. The proposal meets the requirement expressed by the AUWP. On the
one hand, it reduces market fragmentation through increased interoperability of services and therefore contributes
extensively to the competitiveness of the European firms of all sizes, in particular SMEs. The proposed work aims at
providing a shared European Standard and understanding about Foundational Knowledge Requirements to the ICT
profession. As envisaged by the AUWP it can help discover the unexploited potential of the services sector for the
EU economy by improving the performance and quality of the professionals and services, ensuring basic
interoperability and therefore facilitating cooperation among qualification and workplace operators.
EU legislation and EU policies that the work will support
The 2018 release of the EU ICT Rolling Plan encourages European stakeholders to continue standardisation work
on a European Framework for ICT Professionalism in close connection with existing EN 16234-1.
The Digital Single market strategy – especially Objective 4.3.1 - relates to better equipped workforce (ICT
professionals with the right digital skills) / Enhanced use of digital technologies and ICT professionalism / improve
their job opportunities.
The system of recognition of professional qualifications in the EU is governed by Directive 2005/36/EC, recently
amended by Directive 2013/55/EC. It provides a modern EU system of recognition of professional experience and
promotes automatic recognition of professional experience across the EU. The Directive 2005/36/EC on the mutual
recognition of professional qualifications does not apply in principle to ISO/CEN standards of competence per se,
unless these are integrated in national law and designed as a qualification or part of a qualification, necessary
to exercise a given activity or to wear a given title. As an example, one can think of the profession of certified energy
assessor who by law has to follow some training in compliance with a given ISO/CEN standard and who, after
completion of the given training, is the only one able to assess the energy consumption of a building. Even in this
case, it is not the ISO/CEN standard as such which will be considered as a professional qualification, but the
qualification designed around this standard as it has been transcribed in the national law.
The main policy references can also be found in the EU ICT Rolling Plan 2018.
COM (2018) 22. Communication “A Digital Education Action Plan”.
COM (2016) 381. Communication “A new skills agenda for Europe”. It presents a number of actions and initiatives aiming to tackle the skills deficit in Europe. One of these actions is the launch in December 2016 of the Blueprint for Sectoral Cooperation on Skills and the Digital Skills and Jobs Coalition to develop a large digital talent pool and ensure that individuals and the labour force in Europe are equipped with adequate digital skills. This new coalition builds on the achievements of the Grand Coalition for Digital Jobs and the EU e-Skills strategy, and brings together over 400 members from a broad set of stakeholders beyond ICT-sector, including ICT-using sectors, training organisations, academia, social partners and Member States.
COM (2016) 180. Communication “Digitising European industry”, which introduced a set of coherent policy measures as part of a digital single market technologies and public service modernisation package. Part of the communication is devoted to digital skills. In particular, it calls for human capital ready for the digital transformation with the necessary skills.
COM (2013) 654. Communication “Open up education: innovative teaching and learning for all through new technologies and open educational resources”.
IP/13/182 (2013) Grand coalition for digital jobs
Recommendation 2009/C 155/01 on the establishment of a European quality assurance reference framework for vocational education and training (EQAVET).
COM (2015) 192. Communication “A digital single market strategy for Europe
COM (2007) 496. Communication “e-Skills for the 21st century: Fostering competitiveness, growth and jobs”.
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The Digital Single market strategy – especially Objective 4.3.1 - related to better equipped workforce (IT professionals
with the right digital skills)/ Enhanced use of digital technologies and ICT professionalism / improve their job
opportunities.
The work also supports the Digital Agenda for Europe and the ICT policy of the EU with a view of upskilling IT
professionals. The work is of particular relevance for Pillar II Interoperability and standards: "Europe must ensure that
new IT [...] services interact seamlessly anywhere".
Furthermore, the project dovetails with the priorities of the Digital Skills and Jobs Coalition aimed to offer more ICT
training co-designed with the industry; implement job placement programmes; provide more digitally aligned degrees
and curricula at all levels and types of training and education; and motivate young people to study ICT and pursue
related careers.
The work will advance the standardization activities of the CEN/TC 428 “ICT Professionalism and Digital
competences” within its currently defined scope. The scope of the CEN/TC 428 was extended in July 2016 when the
need to revise the existing publications was identified. The upcoming deliverables will be developed by a Project
Team and approved by CEN/TC 428.
5. Objectives and impact
5.1 Objectives
The primary objectives of the proposed project and its final deliverables are a new EN “European Foundational Body
of Knowledge for the ICT Profession (ICT BoK)” and a supporting TR “ICT BoK methodology and User guide”.
The project is planned to work in close interaction with and complementary to other CEN/TC 428 “ICT Professionalism
and Digital competences” projects, either started in 2017 (SA 2017-03) or projected to start in the coming year. It
aims at strengthening (both in the short and long-term) of the ICT Profession in Europe with careful consideration
given to all stakeholder perspectives and needs that are influenced by ICT Professionalism, including ICT business
requirements, market trends and overall digitization of industry.
The forthcoming standard will provide a key contribution to the broader concept of ICT Professionalism, which is
founded upon four main building blocks: competences, bodies of knowledge, professional ethics, education and
training. The proposed EN “European Foundational Body of Knowledge for the ICT Profession (EU ICT BoK)” and
TR “EU ICT BoK methodology and User guide” will substantially strengthen the “Bodies of Knowledge” pillar by
ensuring an EU-wide shared generic basis and agreement in the field.
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Figure 1. The four main building blocks and Bodies of Knowledge
The proposal aims at covering one of the four main building blocks of ICT Professionalism for Europe, namely the
“Bodies of Knowledge” pillar. The picture makes further development from primary sources: IVI/ CEPIS/ Capgemini/
Ernst & Young)
Both outcomes of this project, the EN and the TR, will be interrelated and consistent in concepts with the existing EN
16234-1 “e-CF” and other CEN/TC 428 deliverables currently under planning to mature the European ICT Profession.
For technical development the project will also analyse and take further existing European achievements and
recommendations in the field that are specifically addressing the ‘Bodies of Knowledge’ Pillar (see: The European
Foundational ICT Body of Knowledge – Capgemini, Ernst & Young 2015).
The CEN/TC 428 work activity will take place within the context of the wider e-Skills landscape including CEN and
ISO environment where there are many related concepts, projects and initiatives which will inform and also be
informed by the new standard development. The work aims to build on existing research and will engage multi-
stakeholders to produce a pragmatic agreed generic foundation of knowledge for common application.
The proposed EN “Foundational Body of Knowledge for the ICT Profession (ICT BoK)” will establish an underpinning
generic body of knowledge standard shared by all ICT professionals regardless of speciality. It will support aspirations
towards the establishment of ICT professionalism by fostering the connection of areas of specialised knowledge
underpinned by a common foundational body of knowledge. The scope of the proposed EN “Foundational Body of
Knowledge for the ICT profession (ICT BoK)” will conform to the range of ICT professionals as defined by the
coverage of the EN 16234-1 “e-CF”.
The BoK will provide a generic underpinning body of knowledge European Norm shared by all ICT professionals
regardless of speciality. It will establish the cornerstones of professionalism changing the nature of occupations within
the ICT community from isolated areas of specialised knowledge to connected areas of specialisation offering
enhanced provision of products and services. The scope of the Bok will exclude the IT user community but cover the
entire range of ICT professionals as defined by the coverage of the EN 16234-1 “e-CF”.
5.2 Relevance
One of the key objectives on the Digital Single Market is to answer the need of society and of the economy to benefit
from having a highly skilled ICT workforce. ICT professional competences, knowledge and skills are in high demand
in society and are an essential element to growth and jobs in Europe.
Common foundational knowledge is a crucial component of any profession and can’t be missed; leading examples
are to be found in law and medicine where mutual understanding of knowledge leads to improved outcomes and
differentiates professions from jobs. Similar to and complementary with the standard EN 16234-1:2016 (e-CF) that
provides an efficient and broadly accepted common European language about ICT professional competence, the
European ICT Foundational Body of Knowledge will make another key contribution to increase transparency and
mature the ICT Profession across Europe.
To be applied in the ICT professional workplace, akin to EN 16234-1, it will be designed to be a useful baseline and
benchmark for all stakeholders engaged with ICT Professionalism (e.g. HR and ICT departments of all organisational
sizes including large, medium and small sized, qualification and certification providers public and private, sector
associations, policy makers, etc.).
ICT systems are now foundational to most business and societal activities so the successful development and
management by skilled professionals is increasingly crucial. The risks of unsuccessful management are becoming
higher as business and society’s dependence on ICT increases.
Common foundational knowledge, to be expressed by the forthcoming EN BoK, is at the base of any profession and
brings structure to the content of the professions within each one as well as between the separate professions. It
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facilitates international movement of students and professionals and will also help young people to make better
informed choices for a professional ICT career.
The proposal clearly supports the Digital Single Market strategy – especially Objective 4.3.1 - related to better
equipped workforce (IT professionals with the right digital skills)/ Enhanced use of digital technologies and ICT
professionalism / improve their job opportunities).
A common understanding of the up-to-date needs of shared ICT knowledge by ICT professionals across all industry
sectors will continue to improve the exchange of ICT resources and services across the European single market.
As ICT underpins all areas of economic activity improved ICT skills and professionalism will improve overall economic,
business and societal performance across the EU.
5.3 Indicators
The performance indicators can address issues such as:
The quality, up-to-datedness and market relevance of the EN “Foundational Body of Knowledge” including supporting
technical report TR “BoK Methodology and User Guide” hardly depends on the number and quality of contributions
and suggestions received during the development process. Alongside project phases 1 and 2 the CEN/TC 428 and
the project expert team will ensure together that the project activity gets a maximum of EU-wide outreach, multi-
stakeholder contribution, active participation of CEN member bodies and therefore active involvement of the relevant
parties into the TR 16234-2, -3 updating and TR 16234-4 new development process.
The project aims to meet the following performance indicators;
Compliance with project aims, scheduling and budget as defined by this proposal.
Number of National bodies involved into the formal EN enquiry and TR approval process in phase
3: At least 10 National bodies are planned to be actively involved within the CEN/TC 428 work.
Number and outreach of internal and external meetings and workshops in phase 1 and 2 of the
project:
o 3 project team experts meetings requiring the presence of at least all CEN nominated project
team members + optionally 5 voluntary experts on invitation
o 2 public workshops actively involving the broader ICT multi-stakeholder community
- 1 BoK requirements input gathering workshop with at least 30 participants;
- 1 public workshop discussing the EN and TR draft proposals prior to presentation for
further commenting and approval in the CEN/TC 428 with at least 30 participants.
Number and relevance of ICT sector multi-stakeholders engaged in the EN and TR development
phase 1 via electronic contribution:
o At least 80 participants coming from at least 10 different countries contributing to the survey
in month 8-10
Clearness in project communication.
Overall alignment and consistency in interrelationships with other relevant achievements in the
field, i.e. EN 16234-1.
Acceptance and approval of the proposed standard by the National member bodies as ultimate KPI at the end of the project.
5.4 Impact
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The new EN “ICT BoK standard” and ICT BoK application supporting TR will bring benefit to all stakeholders dealing
with ICT Professionalism across Europe, for example:
Stakeholders involved in Curriculum development, e.g. Universities, VET institutions and private certification and training providers, will dispose of a useful tool for curricula design and communication between different perspectives;
Industry and HR departments, large and SME sized, can use the standard to better understand knowledge requirements for their employees;
The ICT Professional Community, from individuals’ perspective, will get increased understanding about career paths and professional development opportunities in the sector.
The overall attractiveness of employment within ICT roles will be enhanced by the establishment of a recognized ICT
Profession in which a European Foundational Body of Knowledge plays a significant part.
ICT is a transversal issue and the need for a highly qualified ICT professional workforce concerns any sector including
the health, safety and environment domain. ICT is an essential utility that is embedded within almost all processes
deployed by industry, commerce, government, charities and society as a whole. It logically follows that any
enhancement to the quality of ICT provision has high leverage across almost every aspect of European citizens’ lives
from health provision to road and air traffic management to social wellbeing. Further developments, including big data
and artificial intelligence, amplify the dependency of European citizens and governments on the efficiency, accuracy
and reliability of ICT systems. ICT systems are created, built, integrated and maintained by ICT professionals who
are at the heart of this proposal. The ability of ICT professionals to improve performance and innovation will be
enhanced by the application of a Europe-wide shared Foundational Body of Knowledge and its connection to the
wider vision for ICT professionalism for which a BoK is an essential ingredient.
European productivity and prosperity is highly dependent upon the continuing development of the digital economy
which in turn is dependent upon the development of appropriate and sufficient skills and competences of ICT
Professionals to innovate, maintain and secure a digital transformation.
The standard EN 16234-1 “European e-Competence Framework (e-CF)” provides the European stakeholders with a
solid basis for developing ICT Professionals. It gives a shared reference of currently 40 competences as required and
applied at the ICT professional workplace, using a common reference language for competences, skills, knowledge
and capability levels that can be understood across Europe and internationally.
The EN ICT BoK and supporting TR will complement this by providing a foundation stone for ICT professionalism
ensuring that technological innovation is built upon a solid proven base of shared knowledge and understanding.
Foundational knowledge is a crucial resource to extend and develop any profession; leading examples are to be
found in law and medicine where mutual understanding leads to improved outcomes and differentiates professions
from jobs. Similarly, by raising the standards of ICT professionals, the impact and quality of their achievements will
benefit industries and society as a whole.
The forthcoming EN and TR clearly support the subjects within the Digital Single Market program. A Digital Single
Market can create up to 415 billion euro in additional growth, hundreds of thousands of new jobs, and a vibrant
knowledge-based society (from: DSM-factsheet).
Ignorance of standardization on these topics will prevent the Digital Single Market from becoming Single/
Standardised regarding digital/ ICT Professionalism.
By using the standard, European companies will have the tools to more effectively identify, deploy and train their ICT
staff, often distributed across the countries of Europe with different job titles and grading structures. This will reduce
the friction in assembling multi-national teams and thus contribute to more competitiveness and digitization of EU
vertical business sectors.
The project proposal does not focus only about filling existing jobs. It is also about the many new jobs that an efficiently
functioning Digital Single Market will create. Compliance with the upcoming CEN deliverables will better equip EU
businesses to make use of fast evolving technologies.
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The upcoming project will support the life-long learning of ICT professionals in all business sectors by identifying the
knowledge that is required as a common basis for the uptake of technologies and innovative outcomes so that they
can be more easily replicated and scaled up in different industry sectors.
This new EN and TR covering the “Bodies of Knowledge” pillar of a matured ICT Profession will work in practise
similar as and in conjunction with the existing EN 16234-1 “e-CF” which today is in use by many companies and
organisations that are operating in Europe but also globally.
European agreements in the field as this projected BoK standard provide Europe with a shared understanding of the
ICT Profession, supporting therefore a workforce which can act and compete on an international level as a high level
competent, skilled and knowledgeable partner in the ICT domain.
The work will support the development of standards in new areas and upcoming proposals in support of the Digital
Single Market i.e. Big Data, AI, Blockchain, Security, 5G and Cloud professionalism.
Innovation is often built upon existing knowledge and understanding and by finding new and improved solutions to
longstanding processes. This requires access to a broad knowledge base and the ability to communicate with a range
of specialists from across the ICT spectrum. A foundational body of knowledge will facilitate common understanding
across all ICT professional specialists and provide a spring board for communication and innovation.
Influenced by the history of a relatively young ICT industry, it is common that ICT professionals develop from within
a single specialism and continue to enhance their skills within the same technology area. This can lead to delays in
the development of technology-based solutions as development may require the sequential engagement of several
specialists. Within some communities the process of ‘AGILE’ development has been adopted to address this
challenge. The availability of a BoK will support the use of ‘AGILE’ processes in addition to supporting high quality
communications across the actors within more traditional development cycles.
5.5 SMEs, consumer organization and environmental and societal stakeholder representation (Art. 17(4) (b)
of standardization regulation No 1025/2012) example– Annex III organisations (ECOS, ETUI, ANEC, SBS)
SBS is a Partner Organisation of CEN/TC 428, and one of the SBS Board Members is the chairman of CEN/TC
428 hence will have access to all documentation. All the organisations mentioned will be invited to contribute to the
activity by participating in the workshops scheduled for input gathering and validation, and by proposing candidate
experts for the Project Team.
6. Description of the different tasks
6.1 Introduction
In line with CEN rules the minimum time investment for an EN full delivery is 29 months (27+2 for the NWI ballot).
The development of the EN and the TR will be closely interconnected in content and a parallel development of the
two deliverables makes sense from both the EN development and the TR development perspective.
There are reasons to hope that the Formal Vote – FV needs not to take place, as the FV was not necessary for the
approval of the standard; in this case, the duration of the approval and publications activities of the project will be 11
months.
If the project will receive in the Enquiry phase technical comments which required The Formal vote procedure it is
assumed that the activity “Consideration of comments” (8 months maximum) will take only 4 months. In this specific
case the duration of the Action will increase of 9 months.
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The detailed task planning foresees 12 months starting from the moment of expert team nomination for the TR
development technical work to be carried out by expert team under supervision of the CEN/TC 428 + 9,5 months for
the editing and voting process in the CCMC structure.
The interim report will be delivered no later than 18 months after project start.
Figure 2: EN development process from NWI to publication.
Detailed Tim efram e Technical
Specificat ions/ reports ( TS/ TR)
Registration of WI
Start TC/TF
Approval
Definitive
text
available
12 months* 3.5 months
3
months
3 months
Send draft to CMC End TC/TF Approval
Technical work
Processing and/or translation
Technical Committee vote
Total 21,5 months
*An extension of 9 months may be requested
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Figure 3: CEN/TR development process from NWI to publication
The main part of the technical expert work requiring funding in Phase 1 and 2 leading to the Interim Report including
the draft of the standard is planned to take place over a time span of 18 months.
PHASE 0 (ca. 4 months for project start and expert nomination)
PHASE 1 (5 months of technical expert work):
State of the art assessment and input collection.
Evaluation and prioritization of the input collected
PHASE 2 (7 months of technical expert work):
Draft development of the standard and the technical report.
Validation of the proposed update of the standard.
PHASE 3 (ca. 11 months – to be expanded by CEN/TC 428 if necessary, in line with
correct proceedings):
Formal standardization process.
The structure of the pan-European BoK for ICT professionals, its scope, nature and characteristics, as well as the
most suitable way to develop, implement and maintain it, will be shared and discussed with interested stakeholder
through planned events (workshops, consultations, meetings, conferences) and based on desk research, surveys
and face-to-face meetings. The project will be designed to incorporate consensus building regarding the real value
of a common language-based pan-European BoK.
One important technical input to the generic BoK development work will come from existing European achievements
and recommendations in the field (see in particular: The European Foundational ICT Body of Knowledge –
Capgemini, Ernst & Young 2015). Straightforward relationships to existing specific general BoKs (e.g. ACM, IEEE),
regional/ national BoKs (e.g. CIPS) and specialised BoKs (e.g. IMBOK, DS, etc.) will be ensured, and also, very
importantly, consistency and interrelationships with the EN 16234-1, and further CEN/TC 428, CEN and ISO
deliverables where applicable and relevant.
Furthermore stakeholders, such as certification bodies, the education system, and industry will be consulted and
engaged in the development of a generic foundational BoK European Norm model that is self-sustaining and driven
by market demand. With regard to maintenance, a modular structure will be proposed; its building blocks will be
developed at a high level. The meta-level development of the pan-European BoK will make its update and upgrade
easier and in addition offer inclusiveness. The balance between generalities and practical implementation value will
be assured by the involved experts and stakeholder feedback.
A pan-European foundational BoK must and will be designed to facilitate “pan-European usage” and will therefore be
designed to be transparent, easy to understand, used and maintained. The following sections specifies the tasks
aiming at achieving this in more detail.
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6.2 Scope
The first activity of the Project is the selection and establishment of the Project Team. It will take not less than three
months.
In the next few sections for the definition of the duration of the tasks reference is made to its beginning and end. So,
for example the notation “month m – month n” must be read as “the task is scheduled to begin in the first day of month
m, and finish on the last day of month n”. Month 1 is defined as the first month after the project approval.
Task 1: Project management, CEN/TC 428 and multi-stakeholder interaction and project communication
1.1. Project team management, CEN/TC 428 Secretariat interaction and project communication on work in
progress until final EN and TR delivery.
1.2. Project communication and interaction with the European ICT multi-stakeholder community.
1.3. Continued reporting on project progress and exchange with CEN/TC 428 backed by the National Mirror
Committees.
DELIVERABLES: Project reports to the CEN/TC 428 secretariat
KPI’s: Project progress and final delivery on time and meeting all KPI’s defined by the proposal
Task 2: Collection of BoK EN and TR requirements
2.1. Desktop research
2.2. On-line survey
2.3. Multi-stakeholder requirements collecting workshop
DELIVERABLE: a well-documented collection of multi-stakeholder European Foundational BoK requirements and
previous important work done to build upon to be evaluated.
KPI: number of CEN member countries and ICT business stakeholders involved and actively contributing to the
process (coming from at least 10 CEN member countries), completeness of desktop research results
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Task 3: Systematic evaluation of information collected and input received
3.1. Structuring and evaluating of the information and input collected
3.2. Make structured propositions on the forthcoming EN Foundational Body of Knowledge structure,
underpinning philosophy and look.
DELIVERABLE: Structured report on BoK proposed characteristics
KPI’s: Quality of input collected, clarity in structuring of feedback received, completeness of stakeholder perspectives
considered.
Task 4: Editing EN Foundational Body of Knowledge and TR BoK methodology and User guide
4.1. Editing the first drafts of EN and TR
4.2. Feedback gathering from CEN/TC 428 National Bodies and ICT multi-stakeholder community and evaluation
4.3. Evaluation of feedback received - editing the second draft
4.4. Feedback gathering from CEN/TC 428 and ICT multi-stakeholder community including multi-stakeholder final
feedback workshop
4.5. Evaluation and integration of feedback received – provision of the final draft
DELIVERABLE: the final prEN and prTR
KPI's: Consistency of standards structure with other achievements in the field, e.g. EN 16234-1. Quality and clarity
in presentation and content of the documents, completeness of stakeholder perspectives to be addressed by the
guide and methodology.
Transparency in how comments from CEN/TC 428 were addressed to satisfy multiple ICT business stakeholder
needs including national perspectives (logfiles).
Task 5: Interim Report Development
5.1. Interim Report draft editing in collaboration with the TC Secretariat
5.2. Interim Report adjustments
5.3. Interim report proof read and final delivery
Task 6: The standardization process
This task includes all the activities which span from the presentation of the definition and activation of the New Work
Item (NWI) to the approval of the final product of the standardization activity. These procedures are detailed in CEN
BOSS.
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6.3 Workplan & Milestones
MONTH/S
ACTIVITIES RESPONSIBILITY MILESTONE
PHASE 0, 1 and 2 PROJECT START AND TECHNICAL DRAFTS DEVELOPMENT
1 Call for experts Project Secretariat
(SEC)
4 Selection and nomination of
experts in the Project Team
and appointment of the Project
Team Leader
A representative of
UNINFO, CEN and
CEN/TC 428
A – Expert team
selected and contracted
5-8 Collect input on BoK EN and
TR requirements
Project Team (PT)
5-6 New Work Item (NWI)
Proposal development EN and
TR
Project Team (PT)
7-8 Online survey PT
8 BoK Requirements workshop PT B – All relevant input for
consideration collected
C – All workshops
successfully completed
9-16 Translation of input collected
into EN and TR requirements
PT
Prepare the EN and TR drafts PT
Public Workshop for EN and
draft discussion with interested
stakeholders
PT D – Presentation first
draft
16 EN and TR draft delivery to
CEN/TC 428
PT LEADER E.a. – Delivery of Phase
1 result to CEN/TC 428
Communication on work in
progress
Phase 3 FORMAL PROCESS
8 New Work Item (NWI)
approval
CEN/TC 428 SEC
1-27 Formal standardization
process
CEN/TC428 F – BoK and TR
available
9-27 Technical support to CEN/TC
428
PT LEADER
16 Delivery of EN and TR to
CCMC
End of Technical
Activity
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The following Gantt provides an overview of the technical work planned to be performed by the contracted expert
team in phase 1 and 2 of the project.
Phase 1 and Phase 2 Actions/
Month/ Technical Milestones
B-E.a.
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Task 1 Project Management
1.1. Project team management,
CEN/TC 428 Secretariat
interaction and project
communication on work in
progress until final EN and TR
delivery
1.2. Project communication and
interaction with the European
ICT multi- stakeholder
community
1.3. Continued reporting on
project progress and exchange
with CEN TC 428 backed by the
National Mirror Committees
Task 2 Collection of BoK EN and TR requirements
2.1. desktop research
2.2. on-line survey
2.3. multi-stakeholder
requirements collecting
workshop
B
Task 3: Systematic evaluation of information collected and input received
3.1. Structuring and evaluating
of the information and input
collected
3.2. Make structured
propositions on the forthcoming
EN Foundational Body of
Knowledge structure,
underpinning philosophy and
look
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 14 of 23
Task 4: Editing EN Foundational Body of Knowledge and TR BoK methodology and User guide
4.1. Editing the first drafts of EN
and TR
4.2. Feedback gathering from
TC 428 / CEN National
Members and ICT multi-
stakeholder community and
evaluation
4.3. Evaluation of feedback
received - editing the second
draft
4.4. Feedback gathering from
TC 428 and ICT multi-
stakeholder community incl.
multi-stakeholder final feedback
workshop
D C
4.5. Evaluation and integration
of feedback received –
provision of the final draft
Task 5: Interim Report
5.1. Interim Report draft editing
in collaboration with the TC
Secretariat
5.2. Interim Report adjustments
5.3. Interim report proof read
and final delivery
E.a.
Figure 4: Gantt of the Action
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 15 of 23
6.4 Deliverables
1) Interim report
A Technical progress report with an update of the status of the work items (EN and TR) will be provided
to the European Commission 18 months after the signature of the contract. The Interim report will
include:
a) The statistical results from the on-line survey.
b) Draft EN “BoK” and CEN/TR (the proposed text for the EN and TR which will be submitted to CEN/TC 428 for approval).
c) Two external workshops documentation (documentation on the organization and results of the two workshops described above for input collection and validation of the suggested EN and TR content).
2) Final Report
A final technical and administrative report containing the new EN and TR will be provided to the
European Commission and 27 months after the signature of the contract.
The final report will contain an overview of the work performed from the beginning of the action to the date this
final report is produced, working methods, technical approach, achievements, and the assessment of the
indicators against the given benchmarks. In addition and where applicable, the principles for awarding other types
of contracts (catering etc.) will be mentioned in the final report. Moreover, the Final Report will contain in annex
the published EN “BoK” and CEN/TR texts.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 16 of 23
7. Execution of the different tasks - Structure and Resource Requirements
7.0 Organisation & relationship
Figure 5: Structure and Resources
The Project will be carried out by multilevel work under the ultimate technical responsibility of CEN/TC 428 and
incorporating stakeholders and experts across Europe. The structure will be composed as follows:
UNINFO who has the overall responsibility of the Project and operates through a
o Project Manager and a
o Project Secretariat.
UNINFO appoints the Project Manager and the Project Team. The Project Team, led by a Project Team
Leader, reports to UNINFO and CEN/TC 428 regularly on the project status.
CEN/TC 428 has the overall responsibility of final EN 16234-1 update decisions and ensures the quality of
the results produced by the Expert Project Team.
The CEN/TC 428 secretariat will facilitate the communication between the project team and the CEN/TC
428 members and the decision making process in view of adoption of the new standards.
The CEN/TC 428 has the responsibility to find consensus on the drafts and closely work with the Project
team to finalize the drafting process in line with the CEN rules.
The Project Team carries out the technical work.
The Project Team will be composed of a project team leader and experts supplying subcontracted work,
working part time on the action. Administrative support will be provided by UNI/UNINFO. A large part of Tasks
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 17 of 23
2 through 4 will be subcontracted, structured participation of the Project Team is expected for Task 5, and the
PT Leader should be ready to provide technical support on demand, in particular regarding task 6.
PT will work mostly in remote. Three face to face meetings are forecasted for the kick-off, for the proposal
finalization, and when required.
The Project Manager and the PT Leader will take part in the CEN/TC 428 meetings which will take place during
the Project.
The action will be carried out in strict liaison with CEN/TC 428, the secretariat of which is held by UNINFO
(UNI). The NBs which are CEN/TC 428 members will be the preferred and formal channel of communications.
UNINFO (UNI) has volunteered for this role.
Cross participation of experts and back to back meetings are informal channels of communications between
the proposed Project and CEN/TC 428; for this reason CEN/TC 428 experts are by default invited to participate
and contribute as individual stakeholders to the activity of the Project.
Task 6 Formal Process will directly feed into CEN/TC 428 which will process this input as a work item.
The work plan of the Project Team will be aligned with the standardization process in CEN. The Project Team
will co-ordinate the time schedule with the timing of CEN/TC 428 and provide deliverables in due time before their
meetings. The work plan of the Project Team will give room for the given commenting and voting process
within CEN/TC 428.
7.1 Staff member
UNINFO, subcontractor of UNI, carries out all the activities for ICT standards development which fall into the
remit of UNI. UNINFO, on behalf of UNI, will assure the overall project coordination during the project life;
therefore, UNI staff will only manage UNINFO liaison and financial justification (Administrative support).
7.2 Travel costs
N/A
7.3 Equipment necessary to implement the action
N/A
7.4 Cost of consumables and supplies necessary to implement the action
N/A
7.5 Other costs and services necessary to implement the action
Audit Costs
In accordance with the Article II.19.2 (e) and II.23 of the Framework Partnership 2014, an audit will be
required to be provided to EC.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 18 of 23
7.6 Subcontracting to external organizations
UNINFO Secretariat work:
From the functional point of view, UNINFO's activities are described in the next sections.
From the point of view of cost budgeting and reporting, UNINFO's costs are listed as entries in the subcontracting
section, while UNI's are listed in the section relative to affiliated organizations. UNI's and UNINFO's daily rates
are the same, and both equal to the rates agreed between EC and CEN.
UNINFO will manage the Action as follows:
General Project management,
Organization of the selection of experts,
Maintaining contracts with experts,
Support to the Project Team in providing access to published standards and other documentation,
Accommodation of the consensus trajectory - gathering comments from the wider CEN
membership on the Enquiry draft and TR approval phase, and
Support in the editing of the final deliverable.
Role of UNINFO: Secretariat of CEN/TC 428 and secretariat of Project Team:
Management of the CEN/TC 428 secretariat;
Organization of the meetings of both CEN/TC 428 and Project Team (e.g. ensuring that tasks
have been fulfilled, preparation of the agenda, preliminary consultation with the
chairman/convener);
Drafting of CEN meeting reports;
Follow up on decisions and to act as contact point for receiving and distributing viewpoints and
documents;
Drafting and circulation of CEN/TC 428 and PT documents;
Coaching and assisting the Project leader in order to maintain the time schedule of the Project;
Carrying out a call for tender in order to select the required subcontractors;
Contracts with subcontractors;
Coordination of the work of the different subcontractors;
Ensuring accordance with the CEN rules for the preparation of European Standards (e.g. in
accordance with the structure and drafting of CEN publications, CEN template);
Resolving any non-technical comments on the draft standards given during CEN Enquiry or
otherwise (e.g. editorial, structural);
Give assistance, advice and guidance on standardization procedures and processes to all
involved parties (subcontractors, experts, members, conveners, etc.);
Coordination and management of procedures, e.g. enquiry, FV, approval process and resolutions;
Approaching any other stakeholders for involvement in the Project;
Management of the interim and final technical report to the EC on the activities;
Any other occurring tasks emerging from the work under contract.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 19 of 23
Project Team Experts:
The CEN/TC 428 work activity will take place within the context of the wider ICT professional/digital Skills
landscape including CEN and ISO environment where there are many related concepts, projects and initiatives
which will inform and also be informed by the new standard development. The work aims to build on existing
research and will engage multi-stakeholders to produce a pragmatic agreed generic foundation of knowledge for
common application. The development of a high-quality and sustainable European Foundational Body of
Knowledge (EN “BoK”) closely connected to existing concepts, e.g. EN 16234-1 and further CEN/TC 428
deliverables under development requires appropriately qualified expert work.
Absence of funding will prevent development of the deliverables. Ignorance of standardisation on these topics
will prevent the Digital Single Market to become Single/Standardised and therefore more efficient regarding the
ICT Profession.
The expert team will systematically gather, structure and consider all input from stakeholders that is relevant to a
shared European Foundational Body of Knowledge, complement this input collection by active investigation and
desktop research and process all information collected in close interaction with the CEN/TC 428 and ICT
Professional community in a way that allows pragmatic and concise presentation of initially complex content in
two user-friendly, well understandable and methodologically well-grounded final documents, the EN and
supporting TR.
Subcontracting deals with the bulk of the envisaged technical work. The experts selection procedure is the one
described in the FPA 2014.
The professional profiles subject of subcontracting are the Project Team. The required capabilities are
specified in qualitative and quantitative terms and spelled out in terms of competencies.
To employ such specialized experts by a CEN member would be expensive and not economically viable
considering the very specific area of specialization that is required for the execution of this contract. To
engage the services of the appropriate specialist experts from the market is more cost-effective. This
subcontracting also enables the quick availability of the drafts to enter the consensus building and validation
processes, which are CEN’s core business.
The management and administration of the consensus building and validation process with the aim to publish
the end results as a standards deliverable is the responsibility of the CEN National Standards Body.
CEN has a standard methodology to select specialized experts which are called Project Teams. Project Team
experts are selected by a selection panel from the applications received as a result of an open Call for Experts.
The open call refers to the expertise required for being eligible for participation in the Project Team. Experts
are eligible to apply. A balanced composition of the different stakeholders (e.g. in terms of expertise) is
preferred.
For these Project Teams, the selection panel will, in accordance with the existing rules for the selection of
Project Team experts, select experts from the applications received. The selection committee will be composed
of:
A representative of CEN/TC 428 (i.e. Chairman or Vice Chairman)
A representative of UNINFO
A representative from the CEN Central Management Centre.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 20 of 23
For the Project Team in relation to this Grant, experts should have specific expertise and knowledge, which
will be the main criterion for their selection and which is described in detail below. The selection report shall
be prepared by UNINFO and submitted to CCMC. The Project Team shall consist of five members including
one Project Team Leader. The selection report mentioning the principles followed to select these experts will be
provided to EC for approval as soon as the selection process is completed.
PT leader
1 project team leader in charge of team coordination, CEN/TC 428 interaction, stakeholder management
including coordination of stakeholder-driven input and feedback on work in progress collection, project reporting
and EN and TR co-editing and final delivery responsibility
To ensure successful project performance the Project Team Leader should provide a proven track
report making evidence of expertise and experience in the following areas:
o ICT and HR project and project team management on international level,
o ICT professionalism conceptual developments in EU multi-stakeholder environment and
standardization context
o Stakeholder management preferably chairing groups within standardization bodies.
o Several years of expertise in drafting standards at national/European level.
o Expertise in the field of European and international standardization, in particular in the field of
ICT professionalism and digital competences.
o Experience with implementing standards from a long-term perspective.
o Intimate knowledge of the work of CEN/TC 428 and related conceptual developments, in
particular EN 16234-1, ensuring maximum consistency between existing and forthcoming
CEN/TC 428 deliverables aiming all together at maturing the European ICT Profession.
o Intimate knowledge of the work of JTC1, of the national bodies and consortia allowing easy
communications with these bodies.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 21 of 23
The tasks of the Project team leader include:
Distributes, coordinates and integrates the work of the other experts
Responsible for preparing and coordinating the report deliverables
Acts as co-editor of the standard, i.e. support the editor in the development of the standard (especially
support in drafting and evaluation of comments)
Manages communications with liaison bodies (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC 27 and SC 7) and with National
Standardization bodies
Chairs the meetings of the Project Team
Assesses and approves the final version of the PT deliverables
Acts as interface to the "parent" body CEN/TC 428 and with UNINFO
Writes the progress reports including summary of the individual reports
Disseminates information on progress and results
Provide technical content to the preparation of the two workshops (technical and organisation).
Project Team experts
4 project team experts in charge of desktop research, analysis of technical input collected and information
processing, conceptual development of the Foundational BoK in line with existing concepts in the field, EN and
TR co-editing responsibility.
To ensure successful project performance the project team experts should provide a proven track report
making evidence of expertise and experience from the following complementary perspectives:
One BoK development expert covering the ICT supply industry perspective:
o A proven track record, with practical experience and in-depth knowledge in ICT professional
requirements and HR development in the ICT industry supply environment
o Familiarity with existing CEN/TC 428 achievements, in particular EN 16234-1
o In-depth applied knowledge of the current existing BoK landscape and its relevance to the
supply industry
o In-depth understanding of current requirements and capacity to envision the potential of a
European agreed Foundational Body of Knowledge for the ICT Profession from the ICT
supply side
o An ability to understand complex technical issues and be able to present them in a simple
logical format
One BoK development expert covering the ICT demand industry perspective:
o Proven practical experience and in-depth knowledge in ICT professional requirements and
HR development in the ICT industry demand environment
o Familiarity with existing CEN/TC 428 achievements, in particular EN 16234-1
o In-depth applied knowledge of the current existing BoK landscape and its relevance to the
ICT demand industry
o In-depth understanding of current requirements and capacity to envision the potential of a
European agreed Foundational Body of Knowledge for the ICT Profession from the ICT
demand side
o An ability to understand complex technical issues and be able to present them in a simple
logical format
+++ The above two ICT industry representing experts coming from ICT demand and
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 22 of 23
supply will ideally complement each other in experience in ICT organisational size (1 large-
sized organisation experienced, 1 SME experienced) +++
One expert coming from a Higher Education (HE) environment:
o Proven experience and in-depth knowledge in ICT HE curriculum development and students
training
o In-depth applied knowledge of the current existing BoK landscape and its relevance to the
university environment in close interaction with industry
o Capacity to provide guidance on current requirements and capacity to envision the potential
of a European agreed Foundational Body of Knowledge to fully meet the needs from the HE
perspective.
o An ability to understand complex technical issues and be able to present them in a simple
logical format
One BoK development conceptual expert:
o Proven experience in envisioning, designing and maintaining successfully implemented
structures and frameworks in the ICT Professional field in multi-stakeholder environment
and from a conceptual viewpoint.
o Proven ability to understand complex technical issues and be able to present them in a
simple logical format
o Proven capacity to establish consistent and pragmatic conceptual links of new emerging
concepts to other structures, inside and outside CEN/TC 428 and CEN environment.
o Capacity to provide guidance on current requirements and capacity to envision the potential
of a European agreed Foundational Body of Knowledge from a multi-stakeholder
perspectives combining viewpoint
o Intimate knowledge of the work of CEN/TC 428, its existing and forthcoming deliverables,
and in-depth knowledge of EN 16234-1 in particular, to meet the basic requirement of
ensuring maximum of consistency between the existing EN 16234-1 e-CF standard and the
new BoK standard to be developed by this project.
o In-depth knowledge of the existing BoKs landscape, European and internationally.
o To ensure relevance of the final outcome for the market in a long-term, this expertise should
be backed and supported by ICT business and ICT professional HR development practical
experience, ideally from ICT supply environment.
The experts will be selected according to the rules of best value for money.
All applicants to the above–mentioned expert positions shall make proof of the following competences and
expertise:
EN 16234 development
Practical application of EN 16234-1
Years of expertise in drafting standards at national/European level
Expertise in the field of European and international standardization
Years of experience in defining and benchmarking competences and professionalism
Experience with writing and/or the implementation of standards
Knowledge of the work of ISO/IEC JTC 1
Expertise and access to effectively and quickly work on the deliverables
Preferably knowledge of national standards and consortia specifications.
SA/CEN/2018-15 Page 23 of 23
The regular tasks of the project expert include the following:
Coordinates with the other experts
Contributes to the report deliverables
Takes part in the Project Team meetings to discuss results and next steps, to monitor
progress and results in order to ensure agreed timeline
Evaluates specifications and collects requirements
Contributes to the two workshops (technically)
Identifies and combines different individual specifications or existing pre-work for the
definition of the complete EN/TR
Writes technical chapters of the EN/TR
One of the experts will act as Editor. His additional tasks include drafting and proofreading of the EN and TR,
ensuring the integrity of the documents so that they can be sent out for balloting. The editor should be chosen
by the Project team members during its first meeting.
Organisation Workshops
Two workshops are planned during Project phase 1 and 2
1. A one-day workshop is planned in Month 8 with known stakeholders. Their feedback is essential and very
valuable for the planned activity proposal to CEN/TC 428 and participation should not depend on their financial
capacity to cover the travel costs. 10 participants being experienced users should be present in order to
guarantee good and reliable results.
2. An open final workshop is planned in month 15 to collect feedback and further input from European ICT multi-
stakeholders to the draft of new document prior to presenting the final draft from phase 4 to CEN/TC 428 for
initiating and implementing the formal process.
These tasks will be handled by UNINFO.